The SLC is an offshoot of The Urban Legends Reference Pages,
aka snopes, run by Barbara and David Mikkelson. Note that is snopes, lower case.
Always. The ULRP (oops, parmee) is a discussion and research site (and a damn good one,
too) where you can learn:

Is this email warning for real?

FOAF, origin of species

Can I let my child play in a McDonald's ball pit or will he / she die
from being stabbed with a heroin-filled syringe?

Can I blow up a seagull with Alka-Seltzer?

Why can't I get a date on Friday night?

Did we really land on the moon or was it filmed on the Navajo
reservation?

Are there secret clubs at Disneyland? Are they as much fun as the
SLC? (No.)

The SLC, on the other hand, is less of a research site than a place to
hang out and pick each others' brains, sometimes with entertaining
results. SLC members are bright, articulate, resourceful, funny and disinclined
to start flame wars. That doesn't mean they don't defend their
opinions. It just means the answer you get is less likely to consist
of only four letters.

Okaaaay, but you still haven't
explained what SLC stands for.

Well, that might be because
we don't know, either. The SLC was originally a site where the
regular posters would bet on which Urban Legends would be the first to
appear on the main board that week. Thus , it was the "Urban
Legends Reference Pages Pool (as in gambling)
Party."

The SLC part came after someone on the main
board whined that the place seemed be controlled by a "Secret Liberal
Cabal" -- one that wouldn't automatically accept the codswallop said
whiney poster was putting up.

Now we come to "Svenska Limpa"
-- are you lost yet?

Svenska Limpa. Chee, what a concept to
reduce to words. I don't know if I can do this. Svenska Limpa,
of course, is Swedish rye bread and very good rye bread, too. It's
made with orange peel and light rye flour and is as unlike German rye
bread as you can get.

Aside from that, the sound of the words Svenska
Limpa enchanted the people who hung out at the Pool. Whether
this had anything to do with a fabled radio announcer making the bread
sound like a cure for "When Sven's gone limp-a" is
unknown.

What is known is that the term has entered our vocabulary as
meaning nonsense, and should soon be found in reputable internet
terminology dictionaries everywhere, along with "NFBSK"
(see below).

Well, that was another poster complaining that the language and subject
matter in some of our posts was unsuitable for reading "by British
schoolchildren." With a little alteration, the acronym "Not
For British School Kids" began to be used as a warning that the contents of the
attached post might not get past your Net Nanny.

You can see how much we've learned from complaining board posters.
I guess that's why we keep trying to piss them off.
Back

NFBSK
News Flash!

This just in from
Barbara. The term does not come from any of the above sources.
It has nothing to do with us or our audience. Why, the very idea is
nothing but an egotistical posturing on our parts because, you see, what NFBSK
reeeeeeely means is ......